I received a call yesterday (Saturday) from my daughter letting my know that our Oday 28 had drifted onto the beach in New London during the remanants of Ernesto, but not much more than that. During the 60 mile drive, I received two calls from the dock master at our marina telling me not to worry, that they were going to try and put her on a mooring, then a second call, saying she has been secured with a second anchor. I was concerned and somewhat perplexed, because she had ridden out worse storms. When I arrived, she was sitting pretty, two anchors off the bow, and then I got the complete story. Someone in a Hunter of around 30 something feet had come into the cove and attempted to anchor, let out too much scope and drifted down onto my boat, entangling the anchor lines. He was alone, and I am sure VERY concerned. He pulled on his line until his anchor had climbed on to the bow of my boat, then, when a heavy gust swung the bows of both boats together, he managed to grab his anchor as mine was pulled loose from the bottom. Witnesses said he made an attempt to grab my boat, was unable to, and puttered off, where my friends were able to put him a a vacant mooring belonging to one of the other establishments. Then my friends were able to take an achor from one of the docked boats, dinghy it out to my boat with the line still attached to its original boat, use one of my jenny winches to winch Kukulcán off the beach, where she had gently grounded on the in-coming tide, and secured her using both anchors, where she resides comfortably today. On Monday, I will give her a good looking-over, but everyone seemed to think there was no real damage either from the grounding or the other boat. By the time I arrived, everything had been done, people were showering and enjoying mudslides in the clubhouse, so after making a round of the docks and doing what I could to help, I joined them. SO I am grateful for the dock-master and the friends who had no real obligation other than to protet their boats, grateful that she grounded on a soft bottom, that the other boat apparently suffered minimal damage, and that no one was hurt. I'm going sailing Monday.Patty and Bill, O28/O40, New London, CT